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These are worms.
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Not the kind of worms
you find crawling in the dirt.
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These are parasitic roundworms.
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They live inside
a human being's intestines.
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Each of these worms
can grow up to 12 inches long,
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and there are 200 of them
in this jar for a reason,
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because that is the number
you might typically find
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in the belly of a single infected child.
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Worm infections have been around
for thousands of years.
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They have influenced the outcomes of wars,
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and they have long stymied human health.
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Roundworm, hookworm,
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whipworm, schistosomiasis:
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infections from these species
cause pain and discomfort.
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They steal nutrients and zap energy.
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They stunt both physical
and cognitive growth.
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In most cases, these worms
may not be fatal,
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but paradoxically,
that's part of the problem.
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It means that many countries
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simply have not been able
to prioritize their treatment.
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There's a social cost to that:
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children without access
to deworming treatments
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have lower rates of school attendance.
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Adults who grow up
without deworming medicine
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are less productive
and have lower lifelong earnings.
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What intestinal worms do, really,
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is limit potential.
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Currently, there are 1.7 billion people
in the world still at risk for worms.
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Six hundred million of them are in Africa.
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For every dollar invested
in worm control and prevention,
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African countries see up to 42 dollars
return in economic benefits.
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The good news is that deworming
treatment is extremely easy.
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One to three pills
given once or twice a year
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is enough to take a child
from 200 worms to zero
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and to protect them
from infection going forward.
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In communities where
there's a high prevalence of worms,
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treatment can be done right at school.
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This process is extremely simple and fast.
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In Ethiopia, for example,
this is done for 20 million children
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in a matter of weeks.
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The world has come a long way
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on getting deworming medicines
to the people who need them,
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and African governments
want to gain more traction.
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It's now time to match their ambition.
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The END Fund will work with governments
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to create a plan that drastically reduces
the burden of disease caused by worms.
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They’ll work together to ensure
prevention and treatment programs
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can serve everyone.
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The END Fund has an audacious idea:
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they believe we are the generation to end
sickness from worm infections forever.
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The key is not simply to build
new programs from scratch,
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but to amplify the efforts of the programs
that are already taking shape.
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By examining the problem
of how worms transmit disease,
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the END Fund has identified five key areas
where they can drive improvement.
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Number one: lower the cost of treatment.
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Many pharmaceutical companies
offer deworming medicines for free,
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so the END Fund
works with the right partners
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to coordinate their delivery.
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They will continue
to secure drug donations
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for additional at-risk populations.
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They can now do it for less
than 25 cents per child per year.
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Number two: focus on prevention.
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The END Fund calls in the right partners
to educate communities
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on sanitation and hygiene
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in order to change behaviors
around things like hand-washing
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and latrine use,
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ensuring people
are not continually reinfected.
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Number three: invest in innovation.
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The END Fund has contributed to deworming
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by introducing innovative techniques
that effectively target and treat people.
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They will test new delivery methods,
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target the environments
where parasites thrive
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and influence behavior change.
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Number four: monitor and evaluate.
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The END Fund collects detailed data
on all programs on a regular basis
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to help them get better
and better over time.
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Number five: increase local ownership.
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At all stages of the process,
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the END Fund works with government
and local stakeholders
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to encourage cofinancing commitments
that support deworming efforts.
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They also worked
with African philanthropists
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and corporate leaders
to partner on these efforts.
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There's an incredible opportunity
to work together to create a new system
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for disease elimination
for the next decade and beyond.
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Part of the money the END Fund needs
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will go directly toward delivering
deworming treatments
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to communities that need it
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and part will go towards facilitating
the handover of programs
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to local ownership.
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Together, these efforts will create
prevention and treatment programs
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that are sustainable far into the future.
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If this plan gets fully funded
for the next six years,
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tens of millions of people
will receive deworming treatment.
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With that, countries will be interrupting
the cycle of disease transmission
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at all levels,
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and most importantly, people
will experience significant improvements
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in their mental, physical
and social health.
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Just imagine the potential
that will be gained
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when people can stop worrying about these
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and can put their energy
into things like these.
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(Students' overlapping voices)
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(Clapping and singing)
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(Cheering)
Erin Gregory
On 2/05/2020, the title for this video changed to "Parasitic worms hold back human progress. Here's how we can end them"